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Weekend Poll Punditry - McCain Can Win!

We can win this election if every conservative, Republican, and concerned American helps get out the vote in the next two days. Make sure you vote. Get your friends to vote. Donate now to the RNC get out the vote effort - your donations will be more effective now than ever.
 

Note the polls below. They are close – a lot closer than the liberal media wants you to think. The Obama campaign and their propagandists want you discouraged and disheartened. The polls are skewed against McCain/Palin by over sampling Democrats, under sampling Republicans, overestimating the projected turnout for Democrats, underestimating the projected turnout for Republicans, and not considering “undecided voters.” The huge number of undecided voters (approximately 9%) are among likely and registered voters.


IBD/TIPP
(the group that was closest in 2000 and 2004):

Obama 46.7%
McCain 44.6%

Not Yet Sure 8.7%
 
CBS poll picks Obama by 11, but it is helpful to note that the same poll picked Kerry in 2004.
 
Hugh Hewitt: “Scott Rasmussen is a superb pollster and he has Obama's 5 point lead outside of the margin of error, but he also employs a prediction model that assumes a 6.5 point Democrat turnout advantage. … It was a 2% gap in 2004.  Lots of pundits are predicting a demoralized GOP base and subsequent low turnout in support of Rasmussen's and others predictions, but having just returned from Colorado, Minnesota and Ohio where first-hand experiences with volunteers and rallies conveyed exactly the opposite, I think the potential for surprise on the turnout gap is great.”
 
McCain up 2 in Ohio:  The RCP average for Ohio is Obama +4.6, but the latest Mason-Dixon poll has McCain +2. 
 
Pennsylvania a close one: McCain fans should be excited by the fact that Rasmussen puts McCain within 4 in the Quaker state.
 
McCain has pulled back in front in Missouri.
 
Mason-Dixon Poll: Obama lead cut to 2 points in Florida!
 
The RCP Average shows Obama with a 0.3 lead over McCain in North Carolina.
 
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McCain versus Palin?

Yesterday, McCain scolded supporters at a rally for booing Obama. McCain declared Obama “a decent man.” He added: “I admire Sen. Obama and his accomplishments."

Contrary to McCain, I do not believe Obama has any substantial accomplishments worth admiring. Nor, do I believe that a decent American would affiliate with Tony Resko, William Ayers, Bernadette Dorn, Reverend Wright, Michael Pfleger or the likes of ACORN. And, I would run the other way from a man who Farrakhan not only endorses for the Presidency, but refers to as Messianic.

It almost seems as if McCain is running more against Palin than Obama. While Palin rallies the troops toward victory, McCain signals retreat. Sarah Palin aptly plays the role of a political Petraeus, while McCain admires and respects “decent” Obama’s single accomplishment of raising the white flag of surrender.

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The Recent Gallup Poll: A Weighty Matter

The Gallup Daily Tracking Poll came out over the weekend indicating that “U.S. voters are closely divided in their 2008 presidential preferences, with 47% favoring Barack Obama and 44% backing John McCain.” How does this Daily Tracking Poll square with the numbers reported earlier by the Rasmussen Daily Tracking Poll showing a McCain–Obama tie at 48%?

Take a close look at the internal numbers. Rush Limbaugh spent time today reviewing the D.J. Drummond’s article on WhizBang.com, “How Liberal Trolls Are Working to Get McCain Elected President.”  This is a great article, and should be read in full. A more succinct article, “Gallup’s Internals and Our Nations” by Richard Miniter actually summarizes the extensive Drummond piece. Rush relies heavily on Miniter for his report. For now, we will suffice with Rush Limbaugh’s report of the findings:

If you look at the raw numbers, McCain is significantly ahead of Obama, and his support is steady or growing in all categories.  Meanwhile, Obama is steady or falling in all categories.  Yet, the most recent Gallup reported Obama up over McCain by two points.  Why?  The weighting of voters.  Now, listen to how this is done.  "Basically, a guesstimate about voter turnout has changed over at Gallup. They favored Republicans during their convention but now favoring the Democrats.  All polling organizations weight the numbers.  The question is, how?"  Here's how weighting works, by the way. I'll give you radio examples. 

Back in the old days -- it's not done this way anymore, but back in the old days -- minority and foreign language radio stations... Let's take Kansas City, for example.  I worked there for ten years.  And there were two or three black music radio stations. They were always given more weight in terms of percentage of population in the market than actually was.  They weighted it for a host of political and business reasons.  But weighting basically means guessing, and you are assuming. For example, after the Republican convention, they assume that more Republicans are energized to turn out so they put that in their polling data.  That has now subsided and for some reason, Gallup has decided to weight Democrats with more turnout.  The question is how this is all done.  Now, if that's fascinating to you, it gets even more fascinating at this point. 

When the numbers were reweighted to match the ratios established by exit polls over the past few presidential elections the results varied significantly from those reported by Gallup. The result for the same poll is McCain leads with 45% to Obama’s 39%.

Limbaugh paraphrased Richard Miniter:  “Could they be right?  If voter turnout doesn't change substantially, yeah, it could be right.”

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